The Rivals by Richard Brinsley Sheridan
Reading The Rivals, by
Sheridan

The
Acting Company in The
RivalsToday we read and
discussed The
Rivals, by Richard Brinsley
Sheridan in one of my classes. I have taught this play many times
over the years, but have only seen it once. This was done by The Acting Company in
2000, when we brought them to Sweet Briar College as part of the Babcock Season
that year. Although you really have to suspend your disbelief in this play - if
you surrender to the idea that everybody can be mistaken about who everybody
else is, it's a lot of fun.
Hearing the student's opinions is
always fun - predictably, they all liked Mrs. Malaprop, and interestingly they
seemed to like Lydia Languish (a character I have a hard time believing that
Captain Absolute can be so attracted to). Many of them especially related to her
choosing things against her interest, just because Mrs. Malaprop was against
them. I have to agree that it is also very funny when Captain Absolute refuses
to marry his fathers choice - just because it is his father's choice. They also
did not think it was funny when Sir Anthony and Mrs. Malaprop go off against the
idea of educating girls, until someone pointed out that similar attitudes are
held today by people who worry that access to the Internet is bad - why they
might learn things! One
particular thing that I remember from the Acting Company's production - they
added an extra malapropism for Mrs. Malaprop. When she says "Men are barbarians"
near the end of the play - they changed it to "Men are librarians!" I think
Sheridan would have liked that change.
Posted: Wed - December
3, 2003 at 09:55 AM